M
MysticMissMisty
Guest
Salvete, omnes!
I heard a TV news story earlier today that got me thinking. The story basically involved a town whose crime rate was quite high and whose gun crime rate was caused by in large by only about twenty or so people. The city thought that, instead of incarcerating these 20 people, it would track them down and pay them money to enroll in a therapy program to rehabilitate them from their crimes instead of punishing them in the typical way or sending them to jail or something of the like. As I understand it, these people were paid not only to attend the therapy but also afterwards to prevent them from engaging in further criminal activity. According to the news story, a considerable percentage of the people who enrolled in the therapy and were paid to do this did not go on to commit further gun crimes.
So, if it works, why shouldn’t all towns and even all nations adopt such a policy?
Some might argue that it is not right to pay someone to be virtuous. However, I would counter that even punishment proper cannot truly change the deepest heart within a person as far as making them more virrtuous. It only acts as a deterrent for them so that, even though they may not be virtuous of heart, they would be less likely to commit a crime because ofthe potential punishment. So, even punishment proper does not, arguably, correct a person’s heart. At the most, it, arguably, protects the rest of society against them and, in some way, protects them from doing harm to others and/or themselves.
Again, it seems that, in the town under discussion, the payment method did act as a sufficient deterrent against crime, if indeed the purpose of punishment proper is more deterrent that to instill virtue.
So, then, since even punishment, we might say, does little to nothing to “make a person virtuous”, the moral argument that some pose that punishment is better on these grounds falls short. Therefore, I would ask, is not the paying someone not to commit crimes a better option than punishing them for those crimes? If it is not and if punishment is still the best way, then, why is it?
Some may argue that God used punishment as remedy to crime in ancient Israel. They may also argue that Paul states that human justice through punishment acts as God’s wrath against crime. They may also state that God uses punishment indeed in the Final Juddgment. In the first case, though, one may counter that God may have used punishment purely for symbolic purposes to highlight the seriousness of sin generally and of each sin particularly. In the case of the Judgment, one may also counter that it is somehow of greater consequence than crimes considered in themselves on this Earth. In the case of Paul, one could counter that, even though he stated that punishment was used to reward the good and punish the bad, he never said that this was the best and indeed the only possible way to remedy crime.
So, again, I ask the question: Would the method of paying people not to commit crime actually be a better method than the traditional one of punishment and even one God Himself would advocate over punishment, or not? Please argue using evidence for or against either position.
Gratias.
I heard a TV news story earlier today that got me thinking. The story basically involved a town whose crime rate was quite high and whose gun crime rate was caused by in large by only about twenty or so people. The city thought that, instead of incarcerating these 20 people, it would track them down and pay them money to enroll in a therapy program to rehabilitate them from their crimes instead of punishing them in the typical way or sending them to jail or something of the like. As I understand it, these people were paid not only to attend the therapy but also afterwards to prevent them from engaging in further criminal activity. According to the news story, a considerable percentage of the people who enrolled in the therapy and were paid to do this did not go on to commit further gun crimes.
So, if it works, why shouldn’t all towns and even all nations adopt such a policy?
Some might argue that it is not right to pay someone to be virtuous. However, I would counter that even punishment proper cannot truly change the deepest heart within a person as far as making them more virrtuous. It only acts as a deterrent for them so that, even though they may not be virtuous of heart, they would be less likely to commit a crime because ofthe potential punishment. So, even punishment proper does not, arguably, correct a person’s heart. At the most, it, arguably, protects the rest of society against them and, in some way, protects them from doing harm to others and/or themselves.
Again, it seems that, in the town under discussion, the payment method did act as a sufficient deterrent against crime, if indeed the purpose of punishment proper is more deterrent that to instill virtue.
So, then, since even punishment, we might say, does little to nothing to “make a person virtuous”, the moral argument that some pose that punishment is better on these grounds falls short. Therefore, I would ask, is not the paying someone not to commit crimes a better option than punishing them for those crimes? If it is not and if punishment is still the best way, then, why is it?
Some may argue that God used punishment as remedy to crime in ancient Israel. They may also argue that Paul states that human justice through punishment acts as God’s wrath against crime. They may also state that God uses punishment indeed in the Final Juddgment. In the first case, though, one may counter that God may have used punishment purely for symbolic purposes to highlight the seriousness of sin generally and of each sin particularly. In the case of the Judgment, one may also counter that it is somehow of greater consequence than crimes considered in themselves on this Earth. In the case of Paul, one could counter that, even though he stated that punishment was used to reward the good and punish the bad, he never said that this was the best and indeed the only possible way to remedy crime.
So, again, I ask the question: Would the method of paying people not to commit crime actually be a better method than the traditional one of punishment and even one God Himself would advocate over punishment, or not? Please argue using evidence for or against either position.
Gratias.